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pull off

/pool-awf, -of/US // ˈpʊlˌɔf, -ˌɒf //

拉掉,拔掉,拉走,拉开

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an act of pulling off: The inn is well worth a pull-off from the Interstate.
    • : a rest area at the side of a road where vehicles may park.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • It is a spy series at its core, but you guys never really pull from the headlines.

  • Although the blood-spattered offices will be off-limits, staff have vowed to continue producing the magazine.

  • A passing off-duty school safety officer named Fred Lucas said that he had been told the man was a drug dealer.

  • The NOPD fired Knight in 1973 for stealing lumber from a construction site as an off-duty cop.

  • The off-year special election into which Duke threw himself drew little media notice at first.

  • A far-off volley rumbled over the plain, and a few birds stirred uneasily among the trees.

  • Strange to say, the silken cord yielded to the first pull, as if nothing had been wrong with it at all!

  • Never grasp a Fern plant from above and try to pull it away, as this will be almost sure to result in damage.

  • "I ordered you not to come," said Aspinall: "I can still pull a trigger, Sir," replied the man.

  • This harmless image of a fierce beast Yung Pak would pull about the floor with a string by the hour.